ON SCREEN // TELLURIDE AT DARTMOUTH

Telluride at Dartmouth 2017

Thanks to you, this year's Telluride at Dartmouth was a joy from start to finish.

It is such a treat to see these six advance screenings with our dedicated, insightful audience; the highlight of the fest was the spontaneous applause at the end of both shows of Hostiles.

We hope to see you at the Hop Film screenings throughout the rest of the year—several of which we saw at the Telluride Film Festival and are excited to bring to the Hop.

Mark your calendars for 2018: Telluride at Dartmouth returns to campus September 14-20.

See you at the movies!

Sydney and Johanna
Hopkins Center Film

REVIEWS FROM TELLURIDE COLORADO

A.O. Scott perfectly captures the feeling of being at the Telluride Film Festival:

TELLURIDE, Colo.—Spending time at a film festival is like living inside an accordion. Time expands and contracts—months are compressed into a few hours of screen time, and a day of screenings lasts a week—and you can’t always extract the music from the noise. The Telluride Film Festival, which spans each Labor Day weekend in this high-altitude former mining town, is an old-time squeeze box wired up to a Dolby sound system.

Literally: Dolby is a sponsor, with a booming promo that plays at the start of many screenings here. And this festival, which prides itself on its low-key, locavore vibe—movie stars mingle with tourists and students on Colorado Avenue; critical buzz takes shape in lines rather than online—transmits a loud and resonant signal to the movie world below. Read The New York Times Article

*Admission to all six films, choice of screening times and priority seating. Passholders are admitted 10 minutes before single-ticket buyers

**Dartmouth students must log in to their accounts in order to access this special pricing

MORE INFO

The Telluride Film Festival, occurring each Labor Day weekend in Colorado, is considered one of the premier arts events in the country. Each year, hundreds of cinema lovers flock to a tiny mountain town to immerse themselves in a three-day celebration of film. Telluride consistently presents a remarkable and diverse slate: the rare and unknown, restored gems, retrospectives and the latest (and greatest) from the upcoming season. The New York Times calls Telluride “the smallest, most original, and most stimulating of the major festivals.”

Telluride at Dartmouth was born 32 years ago through a long-standing relationship between the Festival and College. Each year, six films come directly from Colorado for special advance screenings at the Hopkins Center. This is a unique opportunity for the Dartmouth community to get a sneak peek at the latest international films—often months before they’re released.

The 32nd Telluride at Dartmouth plays in Spaulding Auditorium. The “Telluride Pass” provides admission to all six films with your choice of screening times and priority seating.